The only difference between adventure and disaster is preparedness.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

New Local Business


The Survival Bunker, a retail store for all things emergency preparedness, will be opening on June 1st in Kalama. For all the details, check out their website at www.survivalbunker321.com. Be sure to visit the store in June to take advantage of special discounts and weekly prize drawings! If your disaster supplies kit is lacking in all the essentials, why not give your support to a new local business? Tell them you saw it on the blog!

What if it happened today?

My task recently was to compare and contrast the differences between Mt. St. Helens erupting in 1980 and if it were to erupt at the same magnitude today. For the sake of a more exact comparison, we assumed the same day of the week and time (Sunday morning, 8:30 am). The day of the week and the time of day made a huge impact in the effects of the eruption. Mid-day on Monday would have been even more devastating. So, in a few installments (I know your attention span) here is my conclusion:

It is hard for us to remember, or for the younger generation, imagine a world without cell phones. There was a time when the person you wanted to contact wasn't just a phone call away, any time of the day or night. It is difficult to think back to when information wasn't instantaneous, even the most banal or inane question able to be answered in an instant from Google or Wikipedia. In 1980, Google wasn't the verb that it is today, in fact, it was only a word in the sense of an Old English cricket term.

But such was the case in May of 1980 when Mt. St. Helens unleashed a fury on the Pacific Northwest that could only be matched by a nuclear explosion. I have been tasked with creating a presentation discussing how things would be different if Mt. St. Helens erupted today, at least from an emergency management perspective.

More tomorrow!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

You've GOT to be kidding

Just got an email from the National Weather Service informing our area that we should be expecting frost tonight. Temperatures will likely dip into the mid to low 30's tonight. If you have any sensitive outdoor plants you may want to bring them inside or cover them up. This weather is ridiculous and I, for one, am sick of it. I would like to speak to a manager immediately and get this situation cleared up.

Mt. St. Helens: Pearls of Wisdom

We are coming up on the 30th anniversary of the eruption of Mt. St. Helens. Hallmark tells us that the traditional gift for a 30th anniversary is pearls. Well, I can't afford a string of pearls that would fit around the mountain, so I'll just settle for sharing some pearls of wisdom with you. I grew up in Castle Rock, in the shadow of the mountain. I have been inundated with volcano stories, ash spoils, tacky trinkets and stupid tourist questions for the past 20 years. (Although not even half as much as my husband who worked at the CineDome for years answering such jewels as "How long does it take for a deer to grow into an elk?" and "What time does the volcano blow each day?")

I wasn't born when the mountain blew, a fact which really seems to annoy people, but I did spend a summer volunteering at the Exhibit Hall and also cleaned rooms at the Mt. St. Helens Motel surrounded by tourists. I had thought that I knew a lot when it came to St. Helens. I didn't realize how wrong I was until my boss asked me (told me) to come up with a presentation about what would happen if Mt. St. Helens erupted today. I whined and tried to weasel my way out saying I wasn't born when it happened but, I'm serious, that really does annoy people and it didn't work. Anyway, after interviewing a few law enforcement types and doing a lot of research on what actually happened between March and May 18th of 1980, I really did learn a lot.

The only perspective I had was of a kid annoyed at camera clad tourists clogging up the pizza joint. Now a card carrying adult and emergency management type, I have a much different appreciation for the challenges of the eruption and the aftermath. I'll share my conclusions to the question of what would happen if the volcano erupted in 2010 in a few installments over the next few days.

If you are interested in learning more about the eruption and the Daily News' role in the reporting, please check out Bob Gaston, former managing editor of the Daily News, presenting an illustrated program, A Small Newspaper’s Biggest Challenge: Covering The Eruption Of Mt St Helens, at the museum on Thursday, May 6 at 7 PM. In his presentation he will review the challenges and stresses faced by the newspaper’s staff during and following the eruption, and their ultimate success which earned them a Pulitzer Prize.

I had the opportunity a few days ago to read the original news reports from the Daily News from May 19th-21st, 1980. No matter your thoughts on the local paper today, those articles were incredible and they absolutely earned the Pulitzer Prize that they won. I am excited for the presentation and I hope that you will check it out as well.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Want to be part of a government experiment?

I can guarantee that this one is completely painless with no hair loss, blurred vision or dry mouth side effects. The National Weather Service has launched an experimental program that will be using Twitter "tweets" to help monitor "significant weather information." The National Weather Service website explains:

Everyone talks about the weather. Now's your chance to "tweet" it and be heard. Through an experimental program, the National Weather Service will be searching for tweets that contain significant weather information.

Why Twitter?

An advantage of searching Twitter for weather reports is the capability to utilize recently added "geotagging" -- geographical information that is associated with something, in this case individual Tweets. This allows the NWS to correlate each Tweet to its location when it was sent. This capability will help to enhance and increase timely and accurate online weather reporting and communication between the public and their local weather forecast offices. The reports will be carefully evaluated during the experiment to ensure quality and timeliness.

Who Can Participate?

Anyone with a Twitter account can participate. Note: Trained storm spotters should use pre-established communication methods (toll-free line, eSpotter, etc.), when possible, to send severe weather reports to the NWS.

For all the information on what to do, click here and read the entire page.

Now you can use that Twitter power for good instead of for mind-numbing factoids like what you ate for breakfast and your opinion on American Idol. Yay!

Monday, May 3, 2010

Red Cross Activates Short Term Text Capabilities

Red Cross Activates Short Term Text Capability for Disaster Relief Fund, valid until May 31, 2010. You can help people affected by disasters, like the recent floods and tornadoes, by texting REDCROSS to 90999 and make a $10 donation to the American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund. To learn more about the Disaster Relief Fund, please visit www.redcross.org.

Free Hazardous Waste Collection in Kalama


From TDN.com

A free monthly household hazardous waste mobile collection event will take place from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at the Cowlitz Bank parking lot on the corner of Fir and Frontage Road, Kalama.

Those unable to attend this event can bring waste to the permanent collection facility at the Waste Control Transfer Station, 1150 Third Ave., which is open from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. every Tuesday and Saturday.

The collection event and permanent facility are only for hazardous waste generated at a residence. Business-generated waste will not be accepted, nor will unlabeled products, leaking containers, containers larger than five gallons, explosives, radioactive material or biological and infectious waste.

Products should be brought in original containers for easier identification. Damaged containers should be placed inside another container in case there is leakage.

The collection event is sponsored by Cowlitz County in conjunction with the city of Kalama and Washington State Department of Ecology. Cowlitz Bank donated the use of its parking lot. Volunteers from WSU Cooperative Extension's Master Composter/Recycler and Master Gardener programs will provide educational information and traffic control.

For more information on mobile collection events or the permanent Household Hazardous Waste Facility, call Waste Control at 425-4302.